Here's a quote you might like, then, from today's emails:
"R3 is going rapidly downhill and seems bent on abandoning all the special qualities which used to make it our much preferred station. Now increasingly vapid chat shows, mindless quizzes and even more mindless reading out of listeners' names- how boring can you get!- and endless advertising for future programmes as well as endless repetition of how to contact R3- all of this has drastically reduced the amount of time occupied by music.It is just a bitty, disjointed experience which we find ourselves less and less inclined to listen to. Plus severe losses of quality broadcasts- eg the Met LIVE on Sat eves. Disappointing decrease also in the amount of good Jazz and good World Music during daytime hours- why can't these have more slots? We don't all simply record or download- we actually want to listen in real time."
I know I risk losing friends , but I have always felt that if jazz, world music and speech/drama are essential features of Radio 3 (which is the FoR3 line), perhaps a more integrated schedule is called for? The opposite view is the reason for 'stripping' genres, so that listeners are clearer when and where they are going to find their preferred programmes; but it also hardly suits those who work during the day without the possibility of listening to the radio if, by the time they switch on in the evening, the kind of programmes they would like to listen to were on earlier in the day.
It probably is time that Radio 3 Extra made an appearance, with all-day coverage of jazz and world music (and folk?); and Radio 3 was left as the traditional output for classical music (incl. contemporary), spoken arts, documentaries and talks. That is certainly not something I would be pushing for if it meant the other 'featured genres' were without a home.
"R3 is going rapidly downhill and seems bent on abandoning all the special qualities which used to make it our much preferred station. Now increasingly vapid chat shows, mindless quizzes and even more mindless reading out of listeners' names- how boring can you get!- and endless advertising for future programmes as well as endless repetition of how to contact R3- all of this has drastically reduced the amount of time occupied by music.It is just a bitty, disjointed experience which we find ourselves less and less inclined to listen to. Plus severe losses of quality broadcasts- eg the Met LIVE on Sat eves. Disappointing decrease also in the amount of good Jazz and good World Music during daytime hours- why can't these have more slots? We don't all simply record or download- we actually want to listen in real time."
I know I risk losing friends , but I have always felt that if jazz, world music and speech/drama are essential features of Radio 3 (which is the FoR3 line), perhaps a more integrated schedule is called for? The opposite view is the reason for 'stripping' genres, so that listeners are clearer when and where they are going to find their preferred programmes; but it also hardly suits those who work during the day without the possibility of listening to the radio if, by the time they switch on in the evening, the kind of programmes they would like to listen to were on earlier in the day.
It probably is time that Radio 3 Extra made an appearance, with all-day coverage of jazz and world music (and folk?); and Radio 3 was left as the traditional output for classical music (incl. contemporary), spoken arts, documentaries and talks. That is certainly not something I would be pushing for if it meant the other 'featured genres' were without a home.
Comment